I just finished Dies the Fire last week. A very good book, with what I think are very realisitic depictions of how people would react to such a situation.

I too am waiting for the sequel in paperback, though once in a while B&N gives me a good enough discount that I can buy the HB sooner.

For those that need the premise:

Electricity seems not to work at all. Smokeless powder still burns, but too slowly to work. (I wonder if he will explore black powder?).

Steam power seems work, but only at the low pressures attainable by 19th century tech, as produced by wood fires. This is the "Deus ex machina" technique so popular in much fiction, where something causes a problem, which sets the stage for the story to follow. In this case though, there has been no resorting to 'special powers', mind reading, magic, alien invaders or other such plot cheating that authors with less imagination resort to.

With the above premise, think of how society would react. The author does a good job, IMHO, of doing this.

I also reread The General on a regular basis, not to mention the other books in the series (The Chosen, The Tyrant, and The Reformer). There is another one in a similar vein (based on Belisarius) and I don't remember the name of the series but it just ended. The first book is called An Oblique Approach, the last is the Dance of Time. Very similar to the General, but I enjoy both of them. Check out Baen.com, the first couple of books are available in their free online library. When it comes to Gates of Fire, I was actually working for a Barnes and Nobles store at the time, and was lucky enough to get an advance copy of it. WOW. I'm a member of Toastmasters International, a public speaking organization. One of the speeches I gave was supposed to be an interpretive reading, and I chose a section of Gates of Fire. Could've heard a pin drop. Some POWERFUL writing.

Her fantasy stuff is quite good, too. And I'm not a sword-and-sorcery fantasy fan, either. I can highly recommend The Spirit Ring, and I enjoyed both The Curse of Chalion and its sequel, Paladin of Souls. However, her Vorkosigan Saga stuff is just outstanding. The conference room scene near the end of Barrayar - "Where have you been, woman!"

I like Elizabeth Moon. I found The Deed of Paksennarion to be an excellent work, though the middle part is very much a "my fifth-level mage defeats your third-level fighter" Dungeons-and-Dragons theme. Still, the conclusion of that book is all-redeeming, and I strongly recommend it. Her other works are good, but not, I think, up to the same standard. I can recommend Remnant Population, though.

David Drake is one of my favorite authors, but his Lt. Leary stuff is classic space-opera, and space-opera just doesn't do it for me. His Hammer's Slammers stuff is excellent, and I've enjoyed most everything else he's written, including his fantasy stuff. I'm not saying I didn't like the Lt. Leary books, but they're just not my cuppa.

Premise: Earth is really a sort of refuge for wild humans, who are domesticated as servants for toher races elsewhere in the galaxy.

Periodically, aliens that deal in a universally illegal drug kidnap human soldiers from earth to populate a planet where the source plants are grown. Sort of a galactic coke farm.

This book opens with US soldiers being kidnapped, semi-voluntarily, and transported to this planet where they need to establish themselves amongst the remnants of previous cultures, everything from Vikings, Scots hill people and Rome.

At the same time, they need to provide the harvest of the drug to the aliens.
(this plot summary is from memory)

There were only three of the Janissary novels, if I recall correctly: Janissaries, Clan and Crown, and Storms of Victory. Pournell never did (as far as I am concerned) complete that series. He left far too many questions open with the third book, but it was a great series as far as it went.

I assume you read Michael Yon's blog. In case you missed this, here's a quote from Gates of Fire (http://www.michaelyon-online.com/wp/gates-of-fire.htm)

******
When Kurilla woke in recovery a few hours after surgery, he called CSM Prosser and asked for a Bible and the book: Gates of Fire. Kurilla gives a copy of Gates of Fire to every new officer and orders them to read it. He had given me a copy and told me to read it. In my book, there is a marked passage, which I thought rather flowery. But I have it beside me on the table by the map of Iraq.

“I would be the one. The one to go back and speak. A pain beyond all previous now seized me. Sweet life itself, even the desperately sought chance to tell the tale, suddenly seemed unendurable alongside the pain of having to take leave of these whom I had come so to love.”

A short time after Kurilla gave me the book, following the death of one of his soldiers, he said to me, “I want you to write about my men. You are the only one who might understand,” the passage registered in my mind.
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